I was gifted a 4K bluray player for Christmas. Whopper!

I immediately bought my favourite movie of all time - Aliens. I only got around to watching it recently and HOLY COW the detail. I grew up watching it on a VHS that I recorded off the TV.

I’m looking for some recommendations for things to visually blow me away. I was thinking of Interstellar, but I did watch that recently enough.

All suggestions welcome and thank you!

edit: Some absolute bangers of recommendations here, many of which I wouldn’t have considered. Thanks folks!

  • @redhorsejacket
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    311 hours ago

    Congrats! I’m in a similar position, recently acquiring a 4k player myself. I’ve been assembling discs as I’ve come across deals. Movies which I think really benefit from the 4k treatment include:

    • Lawrence of Arabia. Ideally, the first time anyone sees this movie would be on an IMAX screen. My first viewing was with 720p DVD rip watched on a cracked tablet screen, and it was STILL visually impressive. Watch it on a scale commensurate with the story itself, and it’s quite possible some sequences will take your breath away.

    • The Magnificent Seven. Similar vein as Lawrence (sweeping widescreen shots of desert locales), but a little grimier. The whole image has this really lovely texture and vivaciousness to it. I particularly enjoy the latest releases new color grade, which lends further vitality to the picture, emphasizing the panoply of color in many scenes through increased saturation and dynamic range. It does not tread into cartoony, Technicolor excess though, instead feeling “just right” to my eyes. Like how I remembered the film looking, rather than how it actually appeared on my old DVD release of the movie. –> Addendum to the above, the Criterion release of Seven Samurai is also worth picking up. It a perfect example of how good an “old” black and white movie can look.

    • Blade Runner. It’s a movie driven by vibe and aesthetic as much as plot, if not more, and the clarity of an HDR 4k picture enhances those features. Those aerial shots of LA, where you can see every little detail of the miniatures, down to each individual window of the Tyrell megastructure, are, again, breathtaking.

    • Alita: Battle Angel. A 21st century update of the cyberpunk aesthetic, but looked at through the maximalist lens of anime/manga, as opposed to the brooding noir tone of the Blade Runner. I don’t know when the next time we’re going to get Jim Cameron levels of production value in a cyberpunk setting any time in the near future, so I appreciate being able to pick out all the little details in the background of the frame, as well as the heightened impact of the crystal clear action sequences (thinking of the rollerball death match race sequence in particular).

    • @khannieOP
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      110 hours ago

      Thanks! And congrats to you too. If you don’t mind me asking, where did you get the deals?

      I’m in Ireland and haven’t seen much beyond Amazon yet and I feel like Bezos has enough money so I’d like to buy elsewhere, wallet allowing. :)

      Browsing today I did see that they have a 3 for 40 pounds (just under 50 USD) deal on quite a few which is tempting.

      • @redhorsejacket
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        28 hours ago

        I check blu-ray.com with some degree of frequency. I’m not sure how reputable they are as a review website, but they appear to fairly objective with their assessments of A/V presentation, citing metrics that sound legit to my otherwise clueless ass. I will say that, subjectively, I tend to agree with their assessments, so I think they’re onto something.

        Their “deals” section is pretty hit or miss, but they’ll occasionally do news post if a particularly good sale is going on somewhere. Similarly, I keep tabs on Criterion to catch any discounts they throw down.

        With that being said, the majority of my acquisitions have been from local book resellers, the occasional yard sale, and impromptu bargain bin dives while passing through a retailer. For example, my 4K steel book of Magnificent Seven was marked down to like $12 in a big tub of random DVDs and Blu-rays. I had to look up this particular release in the store (on blu-ray.com) just to be sure I wasn’t getting scammed with an inferior cash grab transfer. I also picked up a similarly priced 4k steel book of The Lair of the White Wyrm, which was a total impulse buy on the basis of it being $12 and looking nutty as hell.

        So, it’s a lot of luck, and I only own a dozen or so 4k discs, despite having started obtaining them several years ago, well before owning the requisite playback equipment.

        • @khannieOP
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          17 hours ago

          That is great information. Thank you.

          • @redhorsejacket
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            26 hours ago

            I would also suggest finding boutique retailer you vibe with. The Criterion Collection is oft cited, but it’s not the only game in town. I was looking at what was out there last year and these were a few of the retailers that stood out to me.

            Kino Lorber: Similar to Criterion in its seniority (started in 77) and art house focus. However, it seems as though their collection has become fairly diverse over time. I saw a 4k of Ben Affleck’s Reindeer Games listed next to a Blu-ray of an Italian film I’d never heard of from the 70s, so who knows what you might find.

            Arrow Video: UK based company, seems to operate in the same sort of genre space as Shout Factory in the US, with an emphasis on premium box art and pack in bonuses like posters and other bits and bobs. Runs a 2 for $60 UHD Bundle promo pretty consistently on their website. Seems like it’s 2 for £40 on the UK version of the site.

            Indicator Films (I swear this used to be its own label, but it seems to have been purchased by an entity called Powerhouse Films Ltd.). Another UK based label, seems to have themes for its offerings. Currently, they categorize their catalog in to Film Noir, Hammer Films, Ray Harryhausem, Mexico, Ozploitation, and Jean Rollin. So, covering a lot of bases there lol.

            Severin Films, Vinegar Syndrome, American Genre Film Archive, and many others, specialize in the sort of schlock that gave rise to the Video Nasties, a reference I make having never lived in the UK, nor been alive during the time period that term was originated, so forgive me if I’m off the mark on its usage lol. To greater or lesser degrees these focus on the typical genre trifecta of action-horror-sci fi, with some light toe dipping into erotica, which is something to be aware of if you do your Blu-ray shopping at work, like I tend to do lol. Some boutiques are on a strict “check from home” regimen lol.